Texas police officer who pulled gun at pool party resigns

The past year has seen numerous cases that have raised concerns about excessive and sometimes lethal police force in black communities across the United States

The past year has seen numerous cases that have raised concerns about excessive and sometimes lethal police force in black communities across the United States (AFP Photo/Scott Olson)

Chicago (AFP) - A Texas police officer videotaped pulling a gun out at a teen pool party has resigned in the latest racially-charged incident involving alleged excessive force by US law enforcement.

McKinney Police Chief Greg Conley denounced Eric Casebolt's "indefensible" actions late Tuesday as he announced the resignation, insisting they did not reflect the department's "high standard of action".

Video footage filmed by one of the teens and later posted on YouTube showed Casebolt -- who is white -- shouting obscenities at the black teenagers as he orders them to lie on the ground.

At one point, he is seen throwing a bikini-clad girl to the ground and pinning her down. He then pulled out his gun when two young black men approached, apparently trying to help her.

"Our policies, our training, our practice do not support his actions," the police chief said at a press conference.

"He came into the call out of control and as the video shows, was out of control during the incident."

Conley said a dozen officers were sent to the community center Friday amid reports of a "disturbance" at the pool. A group of uninvited youngsters had shown up at the pool party and then refused to leave, police said.

Authorities launched a probe after becoming aware of the existence of the video, which went viral and was replayed repeatedly on US news broadcasts.

The incident comes at a time of heightened racial tensions following a series of incidents involving questionable use of sometimes lethal police force in black communities across the United States.

The white teen who shot the video told a CNN affiliate that Casebolt passed him over while yelling at the black teens.

"You can see in part of the video where he tells us to sit down, and he kinda like skips over me and tells all my African-American friends to go sit down," 15-year-old Brandon Brook said.

Late Monday, a group of protesters demonstrated at a school and a police station in McKinney, waving signs that read "End Police Brutality" and calling for Conley to lose his job.

- Long list of violations -

The US Justice Department has launched investigations into possible civil rights violations by police in a number of the recent cases.

A grand jury declined to indict the officer who shot Brown and investigators with the US Justice Department later concurred that he acted in self-defense.

The family of 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who was shot dead by police while holding a toy gun in Cleveland in November, is still waiting to hear if prosecutors will charge the officers involved.

A number of other incidents that gained national attention in recent months have led to criminal charges against the officers involved.

A white police officer who was videotaped shooting an unarmed, fleeing black motorist in South Carolina was indicted on murder charges Monday.

Michael Slager, who served with the North Charleston police force, was indicted over the April 4 killing of 50-year-old Walter Scott.

Slager was dismissed from the force and arrested a short time after the release of a bystander's cellphone video that shows Scott running away as the officer pulls his gun and fires eight shots, five of which hit Scott in the back.

Six officers also face criminal charges in the death of Freddie Gray, 25, who died due to a serious spinal injury suffered while in the back of a police van in Baltimore, Maryland.

Gray's April death sparked days of sometimes violent protests in Baltimore -- just an hour's drive north of the US capital -- and in other major US cities.

Tuesday, an oversight panel found irregularities in the shooting death of a 25-year-old unarmed man by Los Angeles police.